Thursday, August 16, 2012

Phoenix


Upon further reflection I have to say that my last post sucked.  Another rehash of the same old stuff.  If I can't do better than that I should just stop.

This blog started out as a journal, morphed into a photo blog, then changed into a mountain biking blog.  And what I think it really should be is an exercise for me to try to learn to write a little bit better.  So with that in mind I'm going to try to relate something that happened to me last night.

After work I got the unexpected opportunity to head out for a mountain bike trail ride at a nearby state park.  With the sunset coming earlier as the summer passes I had to move quickly to get things ready and head out to the park.  I got there a little more than an hour before sunset, geared up and rode in to the singletrack.

The sun was already heading towards the horizon as I started, giving the woods a soft, dim appearance that would soon begin to darken.  Usually on my solo rides I keep to a fairly slow speed, not really even bothering to think about the pace I'm keeping.  But I knew that dusk was coming and I really wanted to make at least a full lap around the lakeside trails, so I put a little bit of extra effort into the climbs and tried to keep off the brakes somewhat on the descents.  Looking back at my previous quick time on this loop of 59 minutes I knew that I should be able to finish up way before the light failed, but things sometimes go wrong at the most unexpected moments - so I kept on riding at my quick pace.

The lakeside trail follows the inlets on the edge of the reservoir, so you climb uphill away from the water, turn round the top of the inlet and descend back towards the lake, only to turn and climb up the next inlet.  I had just made a quick descent, curved to parallel the lake shore and was now turning back into the woods beside the next inlet, which was a short climb with a bridge partway up that then turned back towards the lake.

As I turned back into the woods, the sun at my back was aligned with an opening in the trees and shone a burst of coppery light onto the trail just ahead of me.  And standing in that blaze of light was a white tail doe, frozen on the trail looking at me as I made the turn and approached at speed.  The sunlight reflected from her coat almost as if it was a mirror, creating a bright aura that was highlighted by the contrast with the dim forest surrounding us.  The light was so bright that it was difficult to see any details - it just looked like a piece of the sun was in the forest ahead of me.   She remained motionless for a second as I pedaled toward her, looking like a deer phoenix, before bounding away out of the patch of sunlight and disappearing into the cool green of the woods.  I crashed over the roots where she had been standing, turning my head to try to follow her shape, a shadow among shadows, as she bolted between trees.  It only took a second to lose her, then I was turning onto the bridge and moving back parallel to the lake shore.

As I turned another movement caught my eye - a white tail fawn still showing it's spots cautiously skittered away from me and up the hillside.  And as I completed the turn I saw another fawn on the other side of the trail turn and gallop through the forest towards the rest of its family.

The whole experience took perhaps five seconds.  I stood on the pedals and turned up another hill, pushing to keep my pace up as I finished the loop. 

When I made it back to the car I checked the time - 58 minutes, one minute faster than my previous quick time.  That was a pleasant surprise, but it wasn't what I'd keep from this particular ride.  The image of that deer, made of sunlight in the dim green of the forest, will probably stay with me forever.  Those unexpected situations are why I love to spend time in the woods.

5 comments:

  1. Awesome! Gave me goose bumps. I could very easily picture the scene from your excellent description. Well done.

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  2. Dan,

    Thanks, I appreciate that. It actually took a LOT longer to put together that short naration than it usually does for a post.

    Steve Z

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  3. Swamp, my pieces usually take about six hours from start to finish. Sometimes more. I do almost no re-writing...just a swap of a word here or a different punctuation there and always watching for spell check and so on. But I still find mistakes later and usually change them but not always. But it is six hours of fast work and as many posts as you see on my site there are almost that many more that never got past the first page.

    Your last entry didn't suck. I know how you feel, though. Some of my stuff I just put out there so folks will keep coming back.

    One clear fact is that the more I ride, the more I write. But, as I have said, I need new roads to explore and tell about. I've used up all the routes within fifty miles of here and now I am working on putting together gear for overnight rides, with camping. It will make for some good new material, because I hate camping. If I wanted to camp I would just go ahead and be homeless.

    That you want to improve as a writer is laudable but not surprising. From what I can tell, you are always seeking improvement and growth in all your endeavors and that is how it should be. For me, The Trailer Park Cyclist is a kind of definition and celebration of why I am here and it has been a real lifesaver at this point in my life. I think about stopping all the time but I honestly can't imagine life without my Booger and all the great people I have met and will continue to meet because of the sharing of my life on these pages.

    Good writing is a mark of human excellence and not only does it improve the quality of life for the writer, it also has a dramatic effect on those around him. Writing is how we organize our thoughts and it is how we tell other people who we really are. You are a better man for your work here and I hope you will continue to share your trail riding experiences and also, maybe, dip your toe in the frigid waters of self-revelation and what the ticking inside your head sounds like.

    All the best moments in our lives are experienced alone. Your magical vision in the forest was yours, a moment of acute clarity and light and by sharing the story here you enriched the lives of your readers and thus, through the telling, your own.

    tj

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  4. TJ,

    I truly thank you for taking the time to comment. As usual it's an insightful and well put together piece. I'm considering another one of those 'captured moments' as the subject of my next post, but haven't done anything with it yet. But soon...

    Stee Z

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  5. Did I never have you in my blogroll? Man, I apologize. I just noticed. Fixing it.
    tj

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